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Abnormal Behavior: a historical perspective. Being part of history. What is abnormal?. Psychological disorders Dysfunction* Distress Unexpected or atypical cultural response * cognition, emotion, behavior. Psychopathology. How one describes “problems” The medical model
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Abnormal Behavior: a historical perspective Being part of history
What is abnormal? • Psychological disorders • Dysfunction* • Distress • Unexpected or atypical cultural response • * cognition, emotion, behavior
Psychopathology • How one describes “problems” • The medical model • Mental problems as mental illness: disease • Interactional views or “systems thinking”
Describing what you see, or what you think you see • Clinical descriptions lead to diagnostic labels • Labels can be helpful and/or harmful • Presenting problem: many different approaches • The “complaint” what the person describes or someone else describes as the reason for seeking treatment • Clear descriptions lead to clearer treatment
Now it’s your turn: • Tom is uncomfortable riding elevators. Your office is on the fifteenth floor and Tom walked all the way up and not for the exercise • Rachel has been caught urinating in the corner of her bedroom.
What is different about abnormality? • Prevalence • Incidence • Course • Chronic, episodic, time-limited • Prognosis • Onset • Acute, insidious
Lots of other possible factors • Culture • Ethnicity • Race • Gender • Age • Developmental stage
Some considerations • Causation: etiology • Some quite clear, others unknown or not understood • Biopsychosocial model: we’ll return to this • What to do or what not to do about it: treatment • Will it go away on its own or get worse? • Empirically validated treatments • Confounding variables: did the treatment work or was it something else? • The Placebo Effect
Historical Traditions • Supernatural • Biological • Psychological • Psychoanalytic • Humanistic • Behavioral